A. C. Drinkwater Jr., Farms, Inc. v. Ellot H. Raffety Farms, Inc.

495 S.W.2d 450, 1973 Mo. App. LEXIS 1221
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 11, 1973
DocketNos. 9259, 9263
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 495 S.W.2d 450 (A. C. Drinkwater Jr., Farms, Inc. v. Ellot H. Raffety Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. C. Drinkwater Jr., Farms, Inc. v. Ellot H. Raffety Farms, Inc., 495 S.W.2d 450, 1973 Mo. App. LEXIS 1221 (Mo. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

BILLINGS, Judge.

Plaintiff (herein Drinkwater) had judgment for $1,290.17 [attorney fees and costs] against defendant Raffety Farms, Inc., (herein Raffety). Plaintiff also received a judgment for $849.48 [sale price of timber] against defendant Levee District (herein Levee), and the title to a 4.1 acre tract of real estate was quieted in plaintiff and against Levee. The appeals of Raffety and Levee were consolidated in this court and we affirm the judgment against Levee but reverse the judgment against Raffety.

On October 1, 1963, Raffety conveyed by warranty deed the 4.1 acre tract, together with other lands to Drinkwater. In July of 1969 Levee entered the property and cut and sold timber, receiving the sum of $849.48 therefor.

In 1970 Drinkwater filed this suit in three counts. The first count was against Raffety for damages [purchase price], attorney fees and costs for breach of warranties in its deed. Count two was against Levee and was to quiet the title to the tract, while count three sought damages from Levee for the cutting and conversion of the timber.

Plaintiff’s count against Raffety set forth the warranties in the deed and alleged that Raffety “has not warranted and defended the premises and the quiet enjoyment thereof, to plaintiff, but on the contrary, defendant Levee District No. 3, who at the time of making said deed, claimed to have had, and at the present time claims to continue to have lawful right to the premises by an elder and better title” and then set forth Levee’s entry, cutting and conversion of the timber. Raffety’s motion to dismiss this count for failure to state a cause of action was overruled. Raffety filed a general denial to count one. Levee filed a general denial to count two and as to count three filed a general denial and also alleged title in itself by reason of deeds and the doctrine of after-acquired title; further, by limitations under § 516.-070, RSMo., 1969, V.A.M.S., [abandoned].

The case was submitted to the court sitting without a jury on an agreed statement of facts and exhibits, some testimony offered by Levee, and, evidence by Drinkwa-ter as to attorney fees and costs.

Charles French acquired title to the tract as his separate property in 1899. In 1822 he and his wife, Mary, executed a deed of [453]*453trust on the property to Coon as trustee for the Bank of Chester to secure an indebtedness. In 1923 Levee received a warranty deed to the tract from Charles and Mary. In March of 1925 the deed of trust was foreclosed and by trustee’s deed title to the tract was conveyed to I. C. Beare. The next month Beare quitclaimed the premises to Charles French and Mary French. By subsequent conveyances Raf-fety acquired title and conveyed to Drink-water.

It was also agreed that Raffety and his predecessors in title paid the real estate taxes from 1920 through 1963 and that since 1964 the taxes had been assessed against and paid by Drinkwater.

Levee’s testimony adds little. Barnhill, “agent or superintendent” for Levee, referred to a “right-of-way” map [which was not properly identified but reluctantly received in evidence over objection — and which has not been filed in this court by Levee] and stated the tract was on the land side of the levee but “considered” a part of the levee right-of-way. He first said timber was cut off the tract only one time, in July of 1969, then added that timber was also cut by Levee another time — in the 1962-1964 period. Johnson grass was poisoned by Levee around the outside boundary of the tract, “at the berm or foot of the levee”, but not on the tract itself. Levee’s other witness said he lived on Joe Moore’s place, which adjoined the tract, from 1921 until 1969; that Moore [at some undisclosed point in time reputed to have been secretary of Levee] permitted the witness to pasture some cattle on the tract —at some undisclosed time.

Based upon the foregoing the court arrived at the following findings and conclusions : Raffety was on October 1, 1963, the fee simple owner of the tract, and on said date Raffety conveyed to Drinkwater who became the fee simple owner and entitled to possession; Levee claimed title by an after-acquired title but Drinkwater’s title was superior and paramount to Levee’s; Levee cut and sold timber from the tract in 1969 and this act constituted a trespass in violation of Drinkwater’s property rights; that Raffety’s deed covenanted and warranted that it would defend the title and Levee’s cutting timber and claiming title was sufficient to show its claim of superior title and that Raffety being made a party to the suit was sufficient notice to Raffety of Levee’s claim; that Raffety breached its warranty to Drinkwater. Judgments were thereupon entered as stated above.

As previously noted Charles E. French acquired title to the tract in 1899 —as his separate property. The only interest that his wife, Mary, had in 1922 when the deed of trust was given to the Bank of Chester was inchoate right of dower. Her joinder in the deed of trust relinquished her dower as provided in what is now § 442.030, RSMo., 1969. Owens v. Owens, 347 Mo. 80, 146 S.W.2d 569 (1940). Thus, at the time Levee obtained its deed in 1923 Mary did not have any interest in the tract — only a potential interest of inchoate dower in the event the deed of trust was paid and released. The foreclosure of the deed of trust in 1925 extinguished her dower. § 443.290, RSMo., 1969; Owens v. Owens, supra.

Levee seeks to invoke the provisions of what is oft-called the doctrine of after-acquired title, or estoppel by deed, and codified in § 442.430, RSMo., 1969. Levee argues that by Mary’s joinder with her husband in the warranty deed to Levee the doctrine applies since following the 1925 foreclosure of the deed of trust the purchaser at the sale subsequently quitclaimed the tract to Charles French and Mary French.

Aside from any problem of application of the doctrine where property was owned individually by a husband and the title was after-acquired by the husband and wife, creating a tenancy by the entireties, we are in agreement with the conclusion of the trial court that the doctrine is not here applicable.

[454]*454While it is true that Mary is described in the deed as a co-grantor with her husband, this is not the controlling factor that Levee urges. To convey inchoate dower a wife is not only required to join in a properly acknowledged conveyance, she must also be named as a grantor to bar her dower; it is not enough that she signs and acknowledges the deed. McFadden v. Rogers, 70 Mo. 421 (1879). The 1923 deed to Levee refers to party of the first part and acknowledges payment of the consideration to him. In the habendum clause “C. E. French” covenants that he is lawfully seized of an indefeasible estate in fees; that he has good right to convey; that there are no encumbrances done or suffered by him or those under whom he claims; and, that he will warrant and defend the title, etc. In the signature clause the deed recites: “In witness whereof, the said party of the first part has hereunto set his hand . . followed by the signatures of C. E. French and Mary E. French, (emphasis added)

The doctrine enunciated in § 442.430 applies only “Where a grantor, by the terms of his deed, undertakes to convey to the grantee an indefeasible estate in fee simple absolute . . . .” The instant deed clearly limited the covenants to the husband to the exclusion of his wife.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
495 S.W.2d 450, 1973 Mo. App. LEXIS 1221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-c-drinkwater-jr-farms-inc-v-ellot-h-raffety-farms-inc-moctapp-1973.